MẪU ĐỀ THI C1-CIEFor questions 1-6, choose the answer A, B, C or D which you think fits best according to the text.. Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.. Mark your answers
Trang 1MẪU ĐỀ THI C1-CIE
For questions 1-6, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according
to the text Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet
Fish who work for a living
Cleaner wrasses are small marine fish that feed on the parasites living on the bodies of larger fish Each cleaner owns a ‘station’ on a reef where clientele come to get their mouths and teeth cleaned Client fish come in two varieties: residents and roamers Residents belong to species with small territories; they have no choice but to go to their local cleaner Roamers, on the other hand, either hold large territories or travel widely, which means that they have several cleaning stations to choose from The cleaner wrasses sometimes ‘cheat’ This occurs when the fish takes a bite out of its client, feeding on healthy mucus This makes the client jolt and swim away
Roamers are more likely to change stations if a cleaner has ignored them for too long or cheated them Cleaners seem to know this: if a roamer and a resident arrive at the same time, the cleaner almost always services the roamer first Residents can be kept waiting The only category of fish that cleaners never cheat are predators, who possess a radical counterstrategy, which is to swallow the cleaner With predators, cleaner fish wisely adopt an unconditionally cooperative strategy
1 Which of the following statements about the cleaner wrasses is true?
A They regard ‘roamer’ fish as important clients
B They take great care not to hurt any of their clients
C They are too frightened to feed from the mouths of certain clients
D They are in a strong position as they can move to find clients elsewhere.
2 The writer uses business terms in the text to
A illustrate how fish negotiate rewards
B show how bigger fish can dominate smaller ones
C exemplify cooperation in the animal world
D describe the way fish take over a rival’s territory.
Trang 2Extract from a novel
The Giordano painting
'I was up in town yesterday,’ I tell Tony easily, turning back from my long study of the sky outside the window as if I’d simply been wondering whether the matter was worth mentioning, ‘and someone I was talking to thinks he knows someone who might possibly be interested.’ Tony frowns ‘Not a dealer?’ he queries suspiciously
‘No, no - a collector Said to be keen on seventeenth-century art Especially
the paintings of Giordano Very keen.’
‘Money all right?’ Tony asks
‘Money, as I understand it, is far from being a problem.'
So, it’s all happening The words are coming And it’s not at all a bad start, it seems to me I’m impressed with myself I’ve given him a good spoonful of jam to sweeten the tiny pill that’s arriving next
‘Something of a mystery man, though, I gather,’ I say solemnly ‘Keeps a low profile Won’t show his face in public.’
Tony looks at me thoughtfully And sees right through me All my boldness vanishes at once I’ve been caught cheating my neighbours! I feel the panic rise
‘You mean he wouldn’t want to come down here to look at it?’
‘I don’t know,’ I flounder hopelessly ‘Perhaps … possibly ’
‘Take it up to town,’ he says decisively ‘Get your chum to show it to him.’ I’m too occupied in breathing again to be able to reply He misconstrues my silence
‘Bit of a bore for you,’ he says
3 When he brings up the subject of the Giordano painting, the narrator wants to give
Tony the impression of being
A cautious
B resigned
C mysterious
D casual
4 What is the narrator referring to when he uses the expression ‘tiny pill’ in line 12?
A his shortage of precise details about the collector
B his lack of certainty about the value of the painting
C his concerns about the collector’s interest in the painting
D his doubts about the collector’s ability to pay for the painting
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The invention of banking
The invention of banking preceded that of coinage Banking originated something like 4,000 years ago in Ancient Mesopotamia, in present-day Iraq, where the royal palaces and temples provided secure places for the safekeeping
of grain and other commodities Receipts came to be used for transfers not only
to the original depositors but also to third parties Eventually private houses in Mesopotamia also got involved in these banking operations, and laws regulating them were included in the code of Hammurabi, the legal code developed not long afterwards
In Ancient Egypt too, the centralization of harvests in state warehouses led to the development of a system of banking Written orders for the withdrawal of separate lots of grain by owners whose crops had been deposited there for safety and convenience, or which had been compulsorily deposited to the credit of the king, soon became used as a more general method of payment of debts to other people, including tax gatherers, priests and traders Even after the introduction of coinage, these Egyptian grain banks served to reduce the need for precious metals, which tended to be reserved for foreign purchases, particularly in connection with military activities
5 In both Mesopotamia and Egypt the banking systems
A were initially limited to transactions involving depositors
B were created to provide income for the king
C required a large staff to administer them
D grew out of the provision of storage facilities for food
6 What does the writer suggest about banking?
A It can take place without the existence of coins
B It is likely to begin when people are in debt
C It normally requires precious metals
D It was started to provide the state with an income
Trang 4Part 2
You are going to read a magazine article about hippos Six paragraphs have been
removed from the article Choose from the paragraphs A-G the one which fits each gap (7-12) There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use Mark your answers
on the separate answer sheet
When the hippos roar, start paddling!
Richard Jackson and his wife spent their honeymoon going
down the Zambezi river in a canoe.
‘They say this is a good test of a relationship,’
said Tim as he handed me the paddle I wasn’t One morning, Tim decided to count the 10
number of hippos we saw, in an attempt to gauge the population In this part of the river Most of the wildlife keeps a cautious distance, and we were assured that, safe in our canoe, any potential threats would be more scared of
us than we were of them - but we had been warned to give these river giants a wide berth They’d normally stay in mid-stream, watching
us with some suspicion, and greeting our departure with a cacophony of grunts
Neither of us had any canoeing experience
Tentatively we set off downstream, paddling
with more enthusiasm than expertise Soon we
heard the first distant rumblings of what seemed
like thunder ‘Is that Victoria Falls?’ we inquired
nạvely ‘No,’ said Tim dismissively ‘That’s our
first rapid.’ Easy, we thought Wrong!
Tim yelled ‘Paddle!’ and over the next 100 metres an Olympic runner would have struggled to keep up with us The hippo gave up the chase, and although Tim said
he was just a youngster showing off, our opinion was that he had honeymooners on the menu That would certainly be the way
we told the story by the time we got home
The canoe plotted a crazed path as we careered
from side to side, our best efforts seeming only
to add to our plight This was the first of many
rapids, all relatively minor, all enjoyably
challenging for tourists like us
At some times of the year, you can even
enjoy a natural jacuzzi in one of the rock
pools beside the falls The travel brochures say it’s the world’s most exclusive picnic spot It’s certainly the ideal place to wind down after a near miss with a hippo
9
The overnight stops would mean mooring at a
deserted island in the middle of the river, where
Tim’s willing support team would be waiting,
having erected a camp and got the water warm
for our bucket showers As the ice slowly melted
in the drinks, restaurant-quality food would
appear from a cooker using hot coals Then
people would begin to relax, and the day’s
stories would take on epic proportions
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A Luckily we could make our
mistakes in privacy as, apart from
Tim and another couple, for two
days we were alone Our only
other company was the array of
bird and animal life The paddling
was fairly gentle, and when we got
tired, Tim would lead us to the
shore and open a cool-box
containing a picnic lunch
E But number 150 had other ideas As
we hugged the bank he dropped under the water We expected him to re-surface in the same spot, as the others had done Instead, there was a sudden roar and he emerged lunging towards the canoe
B If that was the scariest moment, the
most romantic was undoubtedly
our final night’s campsite
Livingstone Island is perched
literally on top of Victoria Falls
The safari company we were with
have exclusive access to it: it’s just
you, a sheer drop of a few hundred
metres and the continual roar as
millions of litres of water pour
over the edge
F Over the next hour or so the noise grew to terrifying dimensions By the time we edged around the bend to confront it, we were convinced we would be faced with mountains of white water Instead, despite all the sound and fury, the Zambezi seemed only slightly ruffled by a line of small rocks
C There was plenty of passing traffic
to observe on land as well -
giraffes, hippos, elephants and
warthogs, while eagles soared
overhead We even spotted two
rare white rhinos We paddled
closer to get a better look
G When we’d all heard enough, we slept under canvas, right next to the river bank Fortunately, we picked a time of year largely free of mosquitoes, so our nets and various lotions remained unused The sounds of unseen animals were our nightly lullaby
D We had a four-metre aluminium
canoe to ourselves It was a small
craft for such a mighty river, but
quite big enough to house the odd
domestic dispute Couples had, it
seemed, ended similar trips
arguing rather than paddling But it
wasn’t just newly-weds at risk
Tim assured us that a group of
comedians from North America
had failed to see the funny side too
Trang 6Part 3You are going to read a newspaper article about a novelist For questions 13-19, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet
The opera-lover turned crime novelist
Through her series of crime novels, Donna Leon has been solving murders in Venice with great panache - mostly to the soundtrack of grand opera.
Donna Leon first launched herself as a
crime writer in 1991 with Death at La Fenice,
which saw a conductor poisoned in
mid-performance at the Venice opera house ‘It was an
idea that kind of grew,’ she says ‘I had a friend at
the opera house One day we were backstage,
complaining about the tyrannical conductor - and
we thought it would be a laugh to make him the
victim in a crime novel, which I duly went off and
wrote But that’s all it was meant to be I was
lucky to be born without ambition, and I had none
for this book Then I sent it off to a competition,
and six months later they wrote back to say I’d
won I got a contract, and suddenly I had a
purpose in life, a mission.’
To hear her talk, you’d think that until
Death at La Fenice she’d been living in obscurity
Not so She was a well-known academic teaching
English literature at universities in the USA and
Europe But she found that she wasn’t really cut
out for university life, and finally decided to walk
out on it ‘I’m a former academic,’ she says now
through slightly gritted teeth And it’s interesting
that her literary reputation has been made through
a medium so remote from the one she used to
teach
‘You’d be surprised how many
academics do read murder mystery though,’ she
adds ‘It makes no intellectual demands, and it’s
what you want after a day of literary debate.’ That
said, Ms Leon is big business She sells in bulk,
her books are translated into nineteen languages
and she’s a household name In German-speaking
countries ‘All of which is gratifying for me
personally, and I don’t mean to rubbish my own
work, but murder mystery is a craft, not an art
Some people go to crime conventions and deliver
learned papers on the way Agatha Christie
presents her characters, but they’re out of their
minds I stay away from such events.’
Leon also stays away from most of the
other expected haunts of crime writers, like
courtrooms and police stations - ‘I’ve only known
two policemen, neither of them well,’ - which
accounts for the absence of technical legal detail
in the books What’s more, the few points of
police procedure that appear are usually invented -
as, she admits, they’re bound to be when you set a
murder series in a place where murders never
happen ‘Venice is small, compact, protected by
its geography - there’s really not much crime.’
Clearly the key thing about her murder stories isn’t credibility Predictability comes closer to the mark: setting a series in a fixed location that the reader finds attractive, with a constant cast of characters
And that’s what Donna Leon does Her unique selling point is Venice which, as the reviewers always say, comes through with such vitality and forcefulness in Leon’s writing that you can smell it There’s a set cast of characters, led by a middle-aged detective, Commissario Brunetti, and his wife (a disillusioned academic) Then there are her standard jokes - often to do with food Indeed, Leon lingers so ecstatically over the details of lunch, the pursuit of justice frequently gets diverted The eating is a literary device - part of the pattern of each novel, into which she slots the plot ‘That’s how you hook your readers, who like a kind of certainty And the most attractive certainty of crime fiction is that it gives them what real life doesn’t The bad guy gets it in the end.’
Indeed, when the conversation switches to
Donna Leon’s other life, II Complesso Barocco,
the opera company she helps run, she talks about baroque opera as though it were murder-mystery: fuelled by ‘power, jealousy and rage, despair, menace’ which are her own words for the sleeve notes of a new CD of Handel arias by the
company, packaged under the title The
Abandoned Sorceress Designed to tour rare
works in concert format, II Complesso was set up
in 2001 in collaboration with another US exile in Italy, the musicologist Alan Curtis ‘It started as a
one-off There was a rare Handel opera, Arminio,
that Alan thought should be performed, and it became an obsession for him until eventually I said, ‘Do you want to talk about this or do you want to do it?’ So we did it I rang a friend who runs a Swiss opera festival We offered him a production Then had eight months to get it together.’
Somehow it came together, and II
Complesso is now an ongoing venture Curtis does
the hands-on artistic and administrative work Leon lends her name which ‘opens doors in all those German-speaking places’ and, crucially, underwrites the costs In addition, her publishing commitments take her all over Europe - where she keeps a lookout for potential singers, and sometimes even features in the productions
Trang 7MẪU ĐỀ THI C1-CIE
herself: not singing (‘I don’t’) but reading the odd snatch from her books.
13 What is suggested about the novel Death at La Fenice in the first
paragraph?
A Donna based the plot on a real-life event she had witnessed
B Donna didn’t envisage the work ever being taken very seriously
C Donna had to be persuaded that it was good enough to win a prize
D Donna embarked upon it as a way of bringing about a change in her life
14 The second paragraph paints a picture of Donna as someone who
A has little respect for her fellow academics
B regrets having given up her job in a university
C was unsuited to being a university teacher
D failed to make a success of her academic career
15 From Donna’s comments in the third paragraph, we understand that
A she feels crime fiction should be considered alongside other types of literature
B she is pleased with the level of recognition that her own novels have received
C she regards her own novels as inferior to those of Agatha Christie
D she finds the popularity of crime novels amongst academics very satisfying
16 Donna is described as an untypical crime writer because
A she is able to imagine crimes being committed by unlikely characters
B she is unconcerned whether or not her stories appear realistic
C she has little interest in the ways criminals think and operate
D she manages to come up with imaginative new ideas for her plots
17 Donna’s greatest strength as a crime writer is seen as
A her avoidance of a fixed approach
B her injection of humour into her stories
C the clear moral message she puts across
D the strong evocation of place she achieves
18 When Donna helped set up II Complesso Barocco,
A she didn’t expect it to be a long-term project
B she saw it as more interesting than her writing work
C she had a fundamental disagreement with her main collaborator
D she was attracted by the challenge of the first deadline
19 In what way is Donna important to II Complesso Barocco?
A She provides essential financial support
B She oversees its day-to-day organisation
C She helps as a translator
D She organises the recruitment of performers
Part 4
Trang 8You are going to read an article about the human mind For questions 20-34 choose from the sections (A-E) The sections may be chosen more than once
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet.
Which section mentions the following?
things that you will not need if you adopt a certain mental technique 20
using an image of a familiar place to help you remember things 21
being able to think about both particular points and general points 22
things that you may not have a clear mental picture of 23
bearing in mind what you want to achieve in the future 26
an example of an industry in which people use pictures effectively 27
an everyday example of failure to keep information in the mind 28
the impact a certain mental technique can have on people listening to what
an assertion that certain things can be kept in your mind more easily than
information that it is essential to recall in certain situations 31
being able to consider things from various points of view 32
things that come into your mind in an illogical sequence 33
Trang 9MẪU ĐỀ THI C1-CIE
Picture this with your mind’s eye
Trying to understand and cope with life, we impose our own frameworks on it and represent information in different symbolic forms in our mind writes Jonathan Hancock.
A
Think of the mental maps you use to find your way
around the places you live and work Which way
up do you picture towns and cities you know well?
Which details are highlighted, which ones blurred?
Just as the map of London used by passengers on
the Underground is different from the one used by
drivers above ground, so your mental framework
differs from that of other people We also use
frameworks to organise more abstract information
Many people say that they can visualise the
position of key passages in books or documents
Mention a point made by the author, and they can
recall and respond to it by picturing it in relation to
other key points within the larger framework they
see in their mind’s eye On a chaotic-looking desk,
it is often possible to see a mental picture of where
the key pieces of paper are and find a particular
document in seconds
B
We all have our own natural strategies for structuring
information, for altering and re-arranging it in our
mind’s eye You can take control of your thinking
by increasing your control of the mental
frameworks you create Since Ancient Roman
times, a specific framing technique has been used
to improve memory and boost clarity of thought
The concept is simple: you design an empty
framework, based on the shape of a building you
know well, and get used to moving around its
rooms and hallways in your mind Whenever you
have information to remember, you place it in this
‘virtual storehouse’ Whatever it is you are learning
- words, numbers, names, jobs, ideas - you invent
pictorial clues to represent each one The mind
prefers images to abstract ideas, and can retain vast
numbers of visual clues Just as advertisers bring
concepts to life with key images, you highlight the
important points in a batch of information and
assign each of them an illustration
C
Memory and place are closely linked Have you
ever walked upstairs, forgotten what you went for,
but remembered when you returned to where you
were standing when you first had the thought?
When you are trying to learn new information, it
makes sense to use the mind’s natural tendencies
In your mind, you return to the imaginary rooms in
your ‘virtual storehouse’, and rediscover the images
you left there Cicero, perhaps the greatest orator in
history, is reputed to have used this technique to recall complex legal arguments, addressing the Roman Senate from memory for days on end You can use it to remember all the employees in your new workplace, the jobs you have to do in a day, month or year, subject headings for a complex piece of work, or the facts you need to have at your fingertips under pressurised circumstances
D
The system of combining images and ideas works
so well because it involves ‘global thinking’, bringing together the two ‘sides’ of your brain The left side governs logic, words, numbers, patterns and structured thought - the frameworks you build - and the right side works on random thoughts, pictures, daydreams - the memorable imagery you fill them with The fearless, imaginative creativity
of the child combines with the patterning, prioritising, structured thinking of the adult The memory is activated with colours and feelings, as you create weird, funny, exciting, surreal scenes; and the information is kept under control by the organised frameworks you design Imagination is the key You enter a new dimension, dealing with information in a form that suits the way the mind works In this accessible form, huge amounts of data can be carried around with you You never again have to search around for an address book, diary or telephone number on a scrap of paper Your memory becomes a key part of your success, rather than the thing you curse as the cause of your failure
E
Bringing information into the field of your imagination helps you to explore it in greater depth and from different angles Storing it in the frameworks of your mind allows you to pick out key details but also to see the big picture You can use your trained memory to organise your life: to see the day-to-day facts and figures, names, times and dates, but also to keep in touch with your long- term goals By understanding the way your mind works, you can make yourself memorable to others Give your thoughts a shape and structure that can
be grasped and others will remember what you have to say You can take your imaginative grasp
of the world to a new level and, by making the most of mental frames, you can put the information you need at your disposal more readily.
Trang 10PAPER 2 WRITING (1 hour 30 minutes)
on their views
Read the conference programme together with your notes below Then, using the information appropriately, write a report for the Principal explaining how useful the conference was and making recommendations for next year
CAREERS CONFERENCE
Vancouver HallFriday - Sunday, 9am-6pmExhibition - over 100 different jobsTalks on wide range of careersExperts available to give advice
Notes on students’ views:
- exhibition great
- some talks good
- not enough people to answer questions
- better for science students than e.g language or history students
Now write your report for the College Principal, as outlined above You should use
your own words as far as possible
Part 2
Choose one of the following writing tasks Your answer should follow exactly the instructions given Write approximately 220-260 words
Trang 11MẪU ĐỀ THI C1-CIE
2 You have seen the following announcement in an international magazine
FASHION AND CHANGING LIFESTYLES
Do you think that fashion reflects changes in how people live? We would like to know how fashion in clothes has changed since your grandparents were young, and what this reveals about changes in society in your country
The most interesting articles will be published in the next issue of our magazine
Write your article
3 An English-speaking friend is writing a book on TV programmes in different countries Your friend has asked you for a contribution about the most popular
TV programme in your country Your contribution should:
• briefly describe the most popular TV programme
• explain why the programme is so popular
• explain whether or not you think it deserves its popularity
Write your contribution to the book
4 You see this notice in the local library of the town where you are studying
English
The International Development Agency has given our town a grant to be spent
on improving transport and housing facilities
The Planning Director invites you to send a proposal outlining any problems
with existing transport and housing facilities and explaining how they can be
improved A decision can then be made about how the money should be spent
Write your proposal
5 Answer one of the following two questions based on one of the titles below.
(a) Kingsley Amis: Lucky Jim
As part of your course, your teacher has asked you for suggestions for a story to
study in class You decide to write about Lucky Jim In your report, briefly
outline the plot and say why you think Lucky Jim would be interesting for other
students
Write your report
(b) John Grisham: The Pelican Brief
As part of your course you have chosen to write an essay with the following title
‘Who is the most corrupt character in The Pelican Brief? Give reasons for
your views.’
Write your essay
Trang 12PAPER 3 USE OF ENGLISH (1 hour)
Part 1
For questions 1-12, read the text below and decide which answer (A, B, C or D)
best fits each gap There is an example at the beginning (0)
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet
Example:
0 A instruction B information C opinion D advice
0 A B C D
Girls and technology
If you want your daughter to succeed, buy her a toy construction set That
is the (0) from Britain’s (1) … female engineers and scientists
Marie-Noelle Barton, who heads an Engineering Council campaign to encourage girls into science and engineering, maintains that some of Britain’s most
successful women have had their careers (2) by the toys they played with as children Even girls who end (3) nowhere near a microchip or microscope could benefit from a better (4) of science and technology
‘It’s a (5) of giving them experience and confidence with technology so that when they are (6) with a situation requiring some technical know- how, they feel they can handle it and don’t just (7) defeat immediately,’
says Mrs Barton ‘I believe that lots of girls feel unsure of themselves when
it comes (8) technology and therefore they might be losing out on jobs
because they are reluctant even to apply for them.’
Research recently carried (9) suggests that scientific and constructional toys should be (10) to girls from an early age, otherwise the result is
‘socialisation’ into stereotypically female (11) … , which may explain
why relatively few girls study science and engineering at university in
Britain Only 14% of those who have gone for engineering (12) … at
university this year are women, although this figure does represent an improvement on the 7% recorded some years ago.
1 A foremost B uppermost C predominant D surpassing